Search Category: Producers
Lumber Manufacturers That Qualify for Production Exemption
Businesses that qualify for the exemption
To be eligible for this exemption, your business must:
- Engage in a qualifying lumber manufacturing activity. This includes manufacturing rough or finished lumber, such as sawmilling or lumber milling.
- Devote the majority of your business operations to qualifying lumber manufacturing activities. Example: Spending more than 50% of the business’ working time and activities manufacturing rough or finished lumber.
- Own the lumber you manufacture
- Sell the lumber you manufacture
- Report your business’ profit or loss on an income tax return.
Note: Custom sawmilling for someone else who owns the wood isn’t a qualifying activity.
Separately operated business segment
A separately operated business segment can also qualify. It can be a division, branch, or even a cost center. You must keep separate accounting records for the business segment to qualify as a separately operated business segment. This includes recording income, expenses, wages, and assets of the business segment separately. You must also have employees dedicated to operating the separate business segment.
Businesses that don’t qualify for the exemption
The lumber manufacturing exemption is only for businesses that devote the majority of their business operations to qualifying lumber manufacturing activities trying to make a profit.
- It doesn’t include manufacturing of:
- Plywood*
- Particleboard*
- Veneer*
- Paper products*
- Operations that aren’t eligible for the exemption include:
- Lumber manufacturing as a hobby
- Manufacturing lumber for personal use
- Manufacturing lumber for use by your business
* Note: Although these manufacturing activities (plywood, particleboard, etc.) aren’t “lumber manufacturing,” they could qualify for the production exemption.
Purchases That Qualify for the Lumber Manufacturing Exemption
Purchase Requirements
An item qualifies for the exemption, if it meets all of the following requirements:
- Primarily used in the lumber manufacturing process. (See Idaho Code section 63-3607A.)
- Necessary or essential – you can’t manufacture lumber without it
- Directly used in or consumed during lumber manufacturing – after the beginning and before the end of the process:
- The lumber manufacturing process begins when you first handle logs at the processing plant or site
- The process ends when the lumber is at the later point of
– When you place it in storage, even temporarily, to be prepared for shipment or
– When it’s ready to be sold in its final form
- Tangible personal property – must not become real property
- Allowable by law – must not be specifically excluded from the lumber manufacturing or production exemption by law or rule
Exempt Purchases — Lumber Manufacturing
The production exemption lists items that are exempt from tax. Qualifying lumber manufacturers can also buy the following items exempt:
Equipment used primarily to manufacture lumber
Examples:
- Log loaders, log decks
- Log pond items, including: Log loading equipment, boats moving logs from the storage area to the debarker
- Chippers, saws, edgers, trimmers, planers, debarkers
- Mill decks for grading and cutting lumber to length
- Sprinkler equipment to prevent product deterioration
- Dry kilns – including fire brick inside the kiln
- Conveyor belts and equipment to move logs or lumber through the production process
- Equipment to collect waste products used as “hog fuel” for the boiler
- Boilers that produce steam to operate production equipment
Note: Items that become part of real property aren’t exempt
Generators
That produce electricity to power production equipment
Product packaging shipped to the customer
Examples:
- Items that form a container for the lumber (e.g., lumber wrap, steel banding)
Pollution control equipment and materials
If they:
- Are required* to meet air and water quality standards
- Become part of the pollution control equipment, and
- Are used to operate the pollution control equipment.
* The standards must be set by a state or federal agency that has authority to set them.
Examples of pollution control equipment that aren’t exempt:
- Chemicals or other supplies that don’t become part of the equipment
- A smoke stack, building, or other structure that merely houses the equipment
Sales by or to Producers
Selling the goods you produce
- If you sell the goods you produce to a retailer, don’t charge sales tax if the retailer gives you a completed exemption certificate (e.g., ST-101).
- If you sell your goods at retail to the final consumer, you must charge tax. The only exceptions are if:
- The item is never taxed in Idaho, or
- The buyer gives you a completed exemption certificate.
Seller’s responsibility to document sales
If you’re selling to producers with an exemption certificate, you must keep complete records to document all exempt and taxable sales. If you have a complete and accurate certificate on file, don’t collect sales tax on purchases that qualify for the claimed exemption.
Note: Not everything is exempt for producers. You must charge tax on items that aren’t exempt from sales tax. Read more on making sales in our Retailers guide.
Laws and Rules for Production Exemption
Learn more about production exemptions:
- Production Exemption (Idaho Code section 63-3622D; Sales Tax Rule 079)
- Farming (Sales Tax Rule 083)
- Underground Mining (Sales Tax Rule 081)
- Above Ground and Open Pit Mining (Sales Tax Rule 082)
- Lumber (Sales Tax Rule 080)
- Logging (Idaho Code section 63-3622JJ; Sales Tax Rule 102)
- Research and Development (Idaho Code section 63-3622RR)
- Clean Rooms (Idaho Code section 63-3622NN)
- Pollution Control Equipment (Idaho Code section 63-3622X)
- Certificates for Resale and Other Exemption Claims (Idaho Code section 63-3622; Sales Tax Rule 128)
- Use Tax (Idaho Code section 63-3621; Sales Tax Rule 072)
- Radio and Television Broadcasting Equipment (Idaho Code section 63-3622S; Sales Tax Rule 055)
- Equipment to Produce Certain Newspapers (Idaho Code section 63-3622T; Sales Tax Rule 127)
Producers That Qualify for Production Exemption
Businesses that qualify for the exemption
To be eligible for the production exemption, your business must:
- Engage in a qualifying production activity
- Farming – including custom farming
See our Farming and Ranching: Production Exemption guide - Ranching – including custom ranching
See our Farming and Ranching: Production Exemption guide - Mining – including contract mining
See our Mining: Production Exemption guide - Fabricating
- Manufacturing
See our Lumber Manufacturing: Production Exemption guide - Processing – including processing tangible personal property for use as fuel to produce energy
- Raising or maintaining wildlife or fish for taxable hunting and fishing activities
- Farming – including custom farming
- Own the goods you produce. (If you’re a custom farmer, custom rancher, contract miner, or an energy producer, you don’t have to own the goods that are produced.)
- Sell the goods you produce. Either you or someone else must sell the goods at retail.
- Be primarily devoted to qualifying production activities. One way many businesses satisfy this requirement is that they devote the majority of their business operations to qualifying production activities. Example: Spending more than 50% of the business’s working time and activities producing goods for sale.
A separately operated business segment can also qualify. It can be a division, branch, or even a cost center. You must keep separate accounting records for the business segment to qualify as a separately operated business segment. This includes recording income, expenses, wages, and assets of the business segment separately. You must also have employees dedicated to operating the separate business segment.
Businesses that don’t qualify for the exemption
Generally, retailers and other service-related businesses (such as restaurants and dry cleaners) don’t qualify. The production exemption is only for businesses that spend the majority of their time producing goods for sale.
Idaho law excludes the following businesses from the production exemption:
- Utility companies delivering products through pipes, wires, or mains to the place where the customer will use the product
- Publishers of tax-exempt literature
- Contractors improving real property
The production exemption isn’t granted to individuals who don’t operate a business.
Purchases that Qualify for Production Exemption
Purchase Requirements
An item qualifies for the exemption if it meets all the following requirements:
- Primarily used in the production process. (See Idaho Code section 63-3607A.)
- Necessary or essential – can’t produce your goods without it
- Tangible personal property – must not become real property
- Allowable by law – not excluded from the production exemption by law or rule
- Directly used during the production process – after the beginning, and before the end of the process
- This begins at the processing site, when the operator first handles the raw materials used in production.
- The process ends at the later of
– When you place your product in storage, even temporarily, to be prepared for shipment, or
– When your product is ready to be sold in its final form.
– Note: Farming and ranching have different beginning and ending points for the production process
- You use a piece of equipment directly in the production process. It’s necessary and essential, but only 45% of its hours are used in the process. The equipment doesn’t qualify for the production exemption because you don’t use it more than 50% of its time in the production process.
- Your motor vehicles, repair equipment, and administrative equipment and supplies aren’t eligible for the production exemption because they’re excluded by law.
- You use loading equipment to place your palleted finished goods onto a truck for shipment. The equipment doesn’t qualify because it takes place after the goods have been placed in storage.
Special activities
If you qualify for the exemption, items used in some activities are exempt, even though they’re not directly used in production. These activities include:
Quality control
Quality control is a necessary step of the production process in some industries. Its purpose is to maintain specific product standards. Equipment and supplies are exempt if they’re integral and necessary to maintain specific product standards during a quality control function.
Research and development
Equipment and materials are exempt if they are used more than 50% of the time in an activity that advances knowledge or capability in creating or producing tangible personal property. See Idaho Code section 63-3622RR.
Clean room environment in semiconductor manufacturing
Equipment and materials are exempt if you use them:
- Exclusively in or to maintain the environment of a clean room, and
- For research and development or production of semiconductors.
This includes fixtures or improvements to real property that become part of the clean room.
Pollution control
Equipment and materials used to meet air and water quality standards are exempt. The standards must be set by a state or federal agency that has authority to set and regulate them. For producers, the exemption includes tangible personal property that becomes real property used to meet air and water quality emission standards.
Clean-in-place systems
Equipment used in clean-in-place systems in the food processing and food manufacturing industries qualify for the production exemption. The exemption applies to systems that:
- Have automated cleaning processes (i.e., no human intervention), and
- Don’t need to be disassembled to clean the equipment.
Buy without paying tax
If you qualify for the production exemption, you can buy the following items without paying tax:
Raw materials
Raw materials that become an ingredient or component part of the product
Examples:
- Metals bought by a metal fabricator
- Logs bought by a lumber mill
- Potatoes bought by a French fry producer
- Feed bought by a cattle rancher
- Elk and food bought to maintain an elk herd for hunting packages you sell and charge tax on
Chemicals and catalysts
Chemicals and catalysts that cause a physical change or are used to remove impurities from a product. They don’t become an ingredient or component part, but they qualify when they’re used directly and consumed in the production process.
Examples:
- Chemicals used by a potato processor to remove impurities from the potatoes
- Chemicals used to refine metallic ores
- Chemicals used to strip oil and impurities from electronic parts
- Chemicals used in a clean-in-place system in food processing/manufacturing
- Gases used in welding to mold and join a product that’s being fabricated
- Chemicals used in a research and development laboratory
Equipment that’s consumed
Equipment and supplies, including hand tools, that are consumed or used more than 50% of the time directly in the production process and are necessary to the process.
Examples:
- A computer used to run manufacturing equipment
- Equipment used to run or regulate machinery in the production process
- Equipment and supplies used to perform a necessary quality control step to meet product standards
- Equipment and chemicals used in clean-in-place systems in the food processing and food manufacturing industries
- Cranes and lifts used to install production equipment
- Repair parts, lubricants, hydraulic oil, and coolants that become part of production equipment
- Fuel used in production equipment during the production process (e.g., diesel, gasoline, propane)
- Equipment, supplies, and fixtures used in a semiconductor clean room environment
Safety equipment that’s required
Safety equipment and supplies required by a state or federal agency and used in a production area, such as:
- Hard hats
- Protective clothing
- Gloves
- Fire extinguishers used for the safety of your workers
- A first aid kit stored and used in the production area
Taxable Items – Production
Even if you qualify for the production exemption, the following items are taxable:
Used in nonproduction activities
Equipment and supplies used in nonproduction activities are taxable.
Examples:
- Maintenance and janitorial activities
- Office and administrative activities
- Selling and distribution activities
- Transportation activities, such as:
- Moving property over roads, highways, canals, rivers, rail lines, through pipelines or slurry lines, or on aircraft
- Moving goods, including partially completed goods, from one exempt processing location to a separate location that’s part of the continuous exempt processing activity
- Moving raw materials, except farm produce, from the point of origin to where the production process begins
Licensed motor vehicles and aircraft
Used to make repairs
Machinery, equipment, tools, and other property used to make repairs is taxable.
Tangible personal property
Tangible personal property that becomes part of real property is taxable.
Examples:
- Equipment used more than 50% of the time to improve real property
- Materials that become part of real property
Recreation-related vehicles
Examples:
- Snowmobiles
- Off-highway motorbikes
- Motorcycles
- All-terrain vehicles (ATV’s)
- Motor homes
- Travel trailers
- Park model recreational vehicles
- Truck campers
- Camping trailers
Used to make items that you won’t sell
Machinery, equipment, tools, or other property used to make items that you won’t sell is taxable.
Coatings or paint
Coatings or paint used to protect and maintain equipment, including production equipment is taxable.
Safety equipment
Safety equipment and supplies that aren’t used in a production area are taxable.
Examples:
- First aid kit in the office
- Fire extinguisher in the shipping area
- Jacket or gloves used in a production area to keep an employee warm, but not required by OSHA
Change Use of Exempt Item – Production
If you change the use of an item
If you buy an item exempt to use in a production activity, it becomes taxable if you stop using it in a production activity. You must then pay tax on the fair market value of the item.
Note: The opposite isn’t true. If you pay tax on an item because you use it in a nonproduction activity, you can’t claim a tax credit if you begin to use it in a production activity.
Buyer’s Responsibility – Production
Buyer’s responsibility when making exempt purchases
You must keep records of all your purchases, and show whether you paid tax on them.
- Records must show what you bought, how much you paid for the goods, and how much tax you paid.
- Your accounting records must include the standard books and records maintained in a business.
- Keep all your records for at least four years.
Use tax
When you buy, use, or store taxable goods in Idaho, but didn’t pay sales tax when you bought them, you owe use tax.
Use tax is often due when:
- You buy goods from an internet retailer that doesn’t collect tax
- You buy a taxable item from a seller who didn’t charge sales tax because the seller has your exemption certificate on file
- You buy an item in a state that doesn’t have sales tax, then bring the item to Idaho
- You change how you use an exempt item (See If you change the primary use of an item.)
Learn more about use tax on our Use Tax page.
Exemption Certificates – Production
To buy an item exempt from sales tax, give the seller a completed exemption certificate.
ST-101, Idaho Resale or Exemption Certificate
Form ST-101 – Sales Tax Resale or Exemption Certificate
Fill in the form:
- Write the name and address of both the seller and your business at the top.
- In section 2 “Producer Exemptions,” check the box for the producer exemption(s) you qualify for.
- List any products you produce on the line at the bottom of section 2.
- Under “Buyer,” at the bottom of the page, sign the form. Fill in the rest of the fields (name, title, EIN or driver’s license information, and date).
Optional short version of ST-101
- Retailers can print or stamp a short version of the ST-101 on sales invoices, or
- Purchasers can print the short version on their purchase orders.
- This shorter version must be completed for each sale. The wording must be:
I certify that the property I’ve purchased will be used by me directly and primarily in the process of producing tangible personal property by mining, manufacturing, processing, fabricating, or farming, or as a repair part for equipment used primarily as described above. This tax exemption qualifies if this statement is signed by the buyer and the name, address, and nature of the buyer’s business are shown on the invoice. Any person who signs this certification with the intention of evading payment of tax is guilty of a misdemeanor.
[Indicate spaces for NATURE OF BUSINESS and SIGNATURE OF BUYER]
Multijurisdictional
If you buy from out-of-state businesses that are registered Idaho retailers, you can complete the Uniform Sales and Use Tax Certificate – Multijurisdiction instead of Form ST-101. Fill in the form:
- Write the name and address of both the seller and your business at the top.
- Check the box for “Manufacturer.”
- Write your Idaho sellers permit number in the ID section.
- Sign and fill in the bottom of the form.
Remember: Even if you buy from a seller who has your exemption certificate, not everything is exempt.
- Some items are always taxable.
- Some items are taxable if they’re not used in qualifying activities.